Voters OK districts for council Oaklands Measure H, electing councilmen by ' districts Instead of at-large, was approved by a big margin of city voters in Tuesdays election. The results stemmed from a ' low-keyed campaign by the measures proponents that -members of the council chosen only .by voters in the district they represent . would make them more' responsive to their electors. ' . i Now, council members represent seven different districts in which , them must live, but are elected in a city-wide vote. Oakland voters also rejected Measure I which would have changed city charter language so. -that city officials would be referred to as he or sheHsrather than the current he. The tag of councilmen would have been revised to the unisex council members.' ' .But voters approved measure J lifting the city charter imposed ceiling on Interest the Pent of Oakland can pay on bonds and other debts In order to attract potential new investors in pent prpjects. ' 'In Berkeley, rent control advo-cfct$s. hoped the opportunity to .mend an anti-draft message to Washington. would produce a ' large turnout of liberal, voters to the polls and their strategy won an apparent double victory. The proposed rent Ordinance Measure D may have burned hottest of all the ballot measures. Its win establishes a program for control of rental rates and mediation of landlord-tenant dispute. Measure F, which passed by a 3-2 margin, was an advisory resolution expressing opposition to the draft and calling for a reduction in military spending. Measure E, also on the Berke- -ley ballot, won 2-1 approval to impose a 10-year property tax to raise $2.4 million yearly to eh- ' sure the maintenance of library services. Voters In Pleasanton and Livermore overwhelmingly gave the . nod to measures that would acquire additional capacity for industrial uses in the Livermore-' Amador Valley Water Management Agency pipeline. In Pleasanton, voters approved -Measure K, which proposed ah 'Increase in capacity to 500,000 more gallons. Livermores Measure G calls ' for an additional 400,000 gallons capacity. City of Alameda voters rejected Measure A, which would have - changed the elected .offices of auditor and treasurer to the city manager-appointed offices of finance director and treasurer. Measure B, which consolidates Alameda municipal elections and the election of another government agency, passed by more than 2 to 1. Alameda ns also adopted Measure C, which advises legislators to give cities, counties and special districts 2 of the 6.5 percent gleaned from each dollar in sales and use taxes. Instead of the current 1 percent. - Regionally, voters approved retaining the authority of the Alameda County Flood Control 'and Water Conservation District to levy benefit assessments to operate and maintain the present flood control system, as heavy support passed Measures L, M, N. O, P, Q, R and S. -past to of By . ousted